Doubt

Doubt

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Doubt

Meryl Streep, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Amy Adams, Viola Davis, Alice Drummond

Set in 1964, this film, based on Director John Patrick Shanley's play of the same name, centers on a nun who confronts a priest after suspecting him of abusing a black student. He denies the charges, ...( read more  read more... )and much of the quick-fire dialogue that follows tackles themes of religion, morality, and authority.

Id: 10975298

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Recent Reviews


  • October 7, 2009
    Decent thriller which is brilliantly acted by all those in it.
  • October 3, 2009
    THe performances and the writing of this film is nothing short of amazing
  • September 28, 2009
    Okay, this is a test. Name the last film you saw where that Catholic Church came out smelling like a rose. You have 10 seconds . . . . . . . . . . Time's up. Me, I can't think of one -- although I did see Rossellini's The Flowers of St. Francis (Francesco, giullare di Dio)...( read more) last night, so that's one borderline case -- feels like a bad title translation, huh?

    Well, Doubt is going to do nothing to bolster the reputation of the Catholic Church. It's an ugly movie with a cheesy did-it-happen "suspense" motif -- and who cares anyway? Like Morgan Freeman, Meryl Streep can automatically class up any project, no matter how dismal a piece of Borat it may be, and she definitely works her "aura" magic for this thing, casting her energetic glow of intelligence over the whole superficial mess. Even with delivering the cheesiest line of the whole project at the very end, she still manages to keep you from laughing at the tortured way she employs the final word "doubt(s)" to tie into the title -- just in case you forgot what the title was while this movie bored you to sleep. Two stars for Streep.

  • July 18, 2009
    OMG! This or Rachel Getting Married should have gotten best picture. What a cast, what incredible acting, what incredible dynamics, what subtext, what tensions, so many themes, what an important topic, what ambiance, gosh - I've seen this twice and I loved it both times. AWESOME!
  • July 12, 2009
    ''I have doubts. I have such doubts.''

    Set in 1964, Doubt centers on a nun who confronts a priest after suspecting him of abusing a black student. He denies the charges, and much of the play's quick-fire dialogue tackles themes of religion, morality, and authority.

    Me...( read more)ryl Streep: Sister Aloysius Beauvier

    ''Doubt can be a bond as powerful and sustaining as certainty. When you are lost, you are not alone.''

    Doubt is the mystery of whether or not a priest (Philip Seymour Hoffman) is guilty of molesting an altar boy. The priest's primary accuser is Sister Aloysius, the tyrannical principal of the Catholic school that provides Doubt its location. Watching Hoffman and Streep spar is like watching two professional craftsman at their peak, and fans of exquisite acting should waste no time in seeing the battle of wills and the wrath of unknowing . The movie purposely never clarifies the ambiguity of the charges, is in fact Hoffman's priest truly guilty of something, or is Sister Aloysius simply on a mad witch hunt? Streep's character is the most complex and haunted. From one perspective, she's a nearly maniacal dryed up angry, husk of a woman, intent on ruining a man's life and career for no clear reason. However, if her accusations are legitimate, she's a sort of hero, demanding justice from a male-dominated world bent on being superior, bent on following the rules and keeping secrets, secret regardless of fact or indeed fiction. Streep's performance is the real masterpiece here, she is in fire in and years of experience are on show for us to marvel at in Doubt.
    A strict taskmaster, her character relishes her role as the upholder of tradition, rejecting such modern devices as ballpoint pens and the singing of secular songs at Christmas like Frosty the Snowman which she equates with pagan magic.

    According to a report commissioned by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, over four thousand clerics were accused of sexual abuse during the past fifty years. Although approximately thirty percent of these accusations were not investigated because they were unsubstantiated, given the proclivity of the bishops to cover up these incidents, the figures are widely suspected to be underestimated. What may be lost in the discussion of statistics about sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, however, is an understanding of the humanity of the people involved or the complexities of the circumstances.

    This matter is covered in Doubt, based on Shanley's personal experiences at Catholic School, the film explores not only the issue of possible sexual abuse but conservative versus progressive religious values and how far one can rely on suspicion in the absence of proof. Set in 1964, one year after the Kennedy assassination, Sister Aloysius Beauvier is the dragon lady of St. Nicholas school in the Bronx.

    Father Flynn: Where is your compassion?
    Sister Aloysius: Nowhere you can get at it.

    Amy Adams receives the pivotal role of a young, innocent nun who first brings her suspicions about the priest to her superior, and then sees them become Frankenstein's monster. In many ways, Adams' character is us, the audience, placed in the position of having to come to a conclusion on our own when empirical evidence is lacking. Adams' role is the least showy, but she does much with it.
    Also Viola Davis, who, in merely five minutes, decimates the audience with some shocking conclusions of her own as the altar boy's mother. The insulated, hushed world of the Catholic Church is blown wide open by this struggling mother, who's seen more of the world than any of the priests and nuns sheltered behind the church's walls, and who puts the film's running themes of racial and gender inequality into harsh perspective.

    The central battle in Doubt in many forms comes down to each individual's view of the world and his or her ability to accept the ambiguity of day to day life. There's a lot about the world we will never know and much about our futures we'll never be able to shape or plan. So what's better -- anticipating the worst and therefore being prepared when it comes? or believing in the best and running the risk of being disappointed when it fails to arise? The story makes us wonder, and rather than give us answers needlessly, it let's our minds conclude our own solutions.

    Father Brendan Flynn: I can fight you.
    Sister Aloysius Beauvier: You will lose.
  • December 29, 2009
    Meryl Streep merecia em Oscar 2009!
  • December 29, 2009
    the acting was so cool, that i still do not know what to believe, if he was innocent or not...similar experience. this movie is like describing my nature and my inner battle in trusting people. being usually a naive person, i tend to believe everyone, but this world has proven me...( read more) wrong so many time, that i was taught to be suspicious every time. perfectly described in the movie. both sides of it.
  • December 28, 2009
    I really loved this movie. I loved how it captured the era, I thought the characters were outstanding, and it's a great conversational sort of movie.
  • December 27, 2009
    Doubt started as a very promising story about child molestation from a priest. His guiltiness is intriguing along the movie. What appeared a clear ending then turned into doubt from the nun's accusation to the priest due to the lack of concrete or valid proofs... The END.... Wha...( read more)t????

    Did he really molested the child? What was his so secret past mortal sin? Nothing is clear here, everything is left to the imagination... or prejudice?
  • December 25, 2009
    -"Are we here to talk about the Christmas Pagent or this?"
    - "This"
    The Highlight of the movie was really Merl Streep's preformaace time and time again I am astonished at what she can do. Now the dialouge in this movie was simply perfect loved the fact that her character was so...( read more) frank and that little to no emphasis was put on religious aspects (opposite to my fears). The length of the movie felt almost too short, but hey better that than something which seems to be dragging on for an eternity! Merry Christmas Everyone!

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